Andy Daly—they very funny comedian formerly known as Eastbound & Down’s Principal Terrence Cutler—is seeing stars on his new Comedy Central show, which premiered last night: Review. As the show’s fictional host, Forrest MacNeil, Daly “reviews” life experiences like, say, getting addicted to cocaine, by actually, you know, getting addicted to cocaine, and rating his experience on a star system as you’d expect to see from traditional film or book reviews. Daly stopped by _GQ_HQ this week to talk about the show and review a few other life experiences for us.

Andy Daly: Road rage. Forrest has never had any road rage at all, he finds driving very relaxing, but he has to find a way to get road rage. I won’t give any spoilers away, but he figures out a way to get really mad behind the wheel of a car and forces a confrontation with a guy. He’s got a tire iron, I’ve got a baseball bat, we just completely demolish these two cars. It was the funnest thing in the world to shoot…on an overpass over the 110 Freeway during rush hour in L.A. It was bananas.

Any un-reviewed life experiences you want Forrest to take on next?

We had a wall full of index cards of great suggestions, like, joining a frat but we couldn’t figure out a way to do it that didn’t feel like Old School. Another one was joining the mob. The mob has been fictionalized so much, is there a way to do it that really feels real? We would have to do a lot of research. We had another segment that we wrote up where Forrest solves a crime but he became too smart in that one—it’s good to have him dumb.

Anything on your wish list that’s actually impossible?

I don’t know—because this season we send him into space. I feel like nothing is really impossible.

We have a few more life experiences for Forrest to review…Having your own Comedy Central show.

Well, so far, I would give it five stars. It’s been, for me personally, it’s been super exciting. I don’t see any downsides to it. Forrest, having his own Comedy Central show, if he received that assignment, would go about it in all the wrong ways.

Working at GQ.

Forrest would probably have to start off at the bottom—he’d probably get a job sweeping up around here and try to work his way into a position of maximum authority because Forrest is motivated by pompousness and a high opinion of himself… He’d probably give it five stars.

Losing your virginity.

In our sex tape segment, Forrest, as he’s about to have sex with his, uh, his sex-tape partner, tells it—spoiler alert—“This doesn’t always go well for me.” And there’s a few allusions to that throughout the series that Forrest has difficulties in bed— I’m guessing that his loss of virginity was a one star affair.

Quitting your job.

We do that one actually! I think Forrest only gives it two stars because he ends up getting very attached to the job—he takes a job just in order to quit it but ends up getting very attached to it. Rance Howard, Ron Howard’s dad, plays his boss, and it’s heartbreaking, slash, hilarious.

Being in jail.

** â��**Something tells me that if this show continues past season one, we’re going to find out what Forrest thinks about being in jail. Because he’s already broken so many laws—there’s no way Forrest would do well in jail. The lowest rating he can give anything is a half-star, and that would definitely be a half-star.

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